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Navigating the New Normal in Washington State

Navigating the New Normal in Washington State. NMTA Conference November 9, 2011 Steve Mullin President, Washington Roundtable. What is the national picture?. Economy stalled Consumer & business confidence is weak Stock market is volatile. GDP revisions show economy close to stalling.

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Navigating the New Normal in Washington State

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  1. Navigating the New Normal in Washington State NMTA Conference November 9, 2011 Steve Mullin President, Washington Roundtable

  2. What is the national picture? Economy stalled Consumer & business confidence is weak Stock market is volatile

  3. GDP revisions show economy close to stalling

  4. Consumer confidence is very weak

  5. Sales expectations & small business optimism also low

  6. Stock market volatility spiked again

  7. World GDP to remain weak through 2012

  8. US Banks exposure to Europe is concerning

  9. Washington’s economy The troubling The promising • Unemployment remains above 9%. • Worst downturn in non-residential construction in 30 years. • Single family home prices continue to decline. • State revenue projections have been repeatedly reduced. • Roundtable members: 2012 could look a lot like 2011. • Boeing has over 7 years of commercial orders on its books. • Software publishing employment is growing. • Export growth is strong.

  10. Deepest & most persistent employment decline since WWII

  11. WA’s worst downturn in non-residential construction in 30 years

  12. Single-family home prices continue to decline Aug. 2011 US down 3.9% Seattle down 6.1%.

  13. More foreclosures can be expected WA Rank: 2011Q1: 23 2011Q2: 23 Seriously delinquent = 90+ days past due or in foreclosure.

  14. Reasons for optimism…Boeing has over 7 years of commercial orders on its books Excludes military’s new refueling tanker.

  15. Reasons for optimism…Software publishing employment is growing

  16. Reasons for optimism…WA employment will recover slightly faster than US ERFC: WA employment peaked 1 month after U.S. (Feb. 2008 v. Jan. 2008) Both WA & the U.S. reached a trough in Feb. 2010. Both WA & U.S. won’t reach their previous peak until after 2013.

  17. Reasons for optimism…WA personal income will recover slightly faster than US

  18. Reasons for optimism…WA export growth is strong and will help state outperform in the recovery Total exports were up 31.5% y/y in Q2.

  19. Washington:Real per capita general fund state revenue General Fund & Related Funds for FY 07-09. New definition for GF in FY10-13.

  20. Washington: General Fund Forecast by Fiscal Year FY 2011 revenues were boosted by one-time transfers of non-GF0S funds into the GF-S.

  21. Washington’s business climate:What Roundtable members are saying • Outlook: guarded. • Economy: • 2012 will look a lot like 2011. • Washington’s recovery is heavily dependent on national economy, which continues to struggle. • Optimism / concern is sector specific – sectors that touch housing in any way are most negative. • Bright spots: ramp up in hiring at Boeing; tech.

  22. Perception of state business climate isn’t good, but getting better

  23. Perception of state competitiveness improving, but long way to go Rank Washington's competitiveness relative to other states.

  24. Skeptical about WA’s commitment to job creation Relative to efforts in other states, how committed are WA’s elected officials to doing what it takes to create/maintain jobs?

  25. What can state leaders do about it? Acknowledge the bad. Set a vision for a positive future. Take action.

  26. Deal with the immediate crisis.

  27. Long-term: Set a course for growth.

  28. First: BENCHMARKS for a BETTER WASHINGTON Identify what constitutes success for Washington state. Second: Establish a roadmap for moving our state forward.

  29. Benchmarks for a Better Washington Look beyond just the next 2 years. Embrace a balanced a comprehensive plan for ongoing improvement. Commit to pursue necessary policy changes and measure progress against clear, measurable benchmarks. Long-term success and vitality depends on a common commitment to: protect & enhance quality of life. provide employers with the competitive edge necessary to succeed in a global economy.

  30. Goals: Criteria: Benchmark must speak to the idea that Washington must compete on value (quality AND cost). Benchmark has to be measurable via recognized, reliable, independent sources that include comparative data for all 50 states. • Rank among the top 10 states in the nation on key quality of life and innovation metrics. • Stay or get out of the 10 states with the highest business costs.

  31. BENCHMARKS for a BETTER WASHINGTON

  32. BENCHMARKS for a BETTER WASHINGTON

  33. BENCHMARKS for a BETTER WASHINGTON

  34. BENCHMARKS for a BETTER WASHINGTON

  35. Fiscal policy: • Focus on sustainable spending. • Maintain reserve = to 5% of GF expenditures. • Establish defined contribution pension plan for new hires. • Reinstate firm expenditure limit • Better manage debt service • Business costs • Refrain from expanding UI benefits. • Adopt mainstream voluntary settlement option. • Establish precise definition for occupational disease. • Permit private insurers to offer workers’ compensation policies. A year-long partnership to research and promote a series of actionable and substantive policy recommendations that, if enacted, will preserve essential services, lay a foundation for sustainable economic growth and create an environment in which Washingtonians can thrive. Key recommendations: • Establish a public policy foundation for economic vitality. • Reset state spending to a sustainable level.

  36. Competitive Sourcing • Ensure contracting out authority isn’t subject to collective bargaining. • ID opportunities to reduce costs through competitive contracting. • Create commission • Health Care • Continue to seek Medicaid waivers to gain maximum flexibility. • Collective bargaining: negotiate a benefits agreements approaching private sector parity. • Government restructuring • Pursue agency consolidation. A year-long partnership to research and promote a series of actionable and substantive policy recommendations that, if enacted, will preserve essential services, lay a foundation for sustainable economic growth and create an environment in which Washingtonians can thrive. Key recommendations: Establish a public policy foundation for economic vitality. Reset state spending to a sustainable level.

  37. Regulatory reform • Adopt EPA standards, exceeding them only when justified. • Create a permanent task force monitoring leg. & gov. rule-making. • Exempt minor projects from the SEPA process. • Economic Development • Expand STEM education & enhance accountability. • Use new four-tier evaluation system to guide K-12 personnel decisions. • Make performance primary criterion in teacher layoffs. • Preserve access to higher education. • Retain tax incentives the promote investment & job creation. • Preserve tolling to support transportation investments. A year-long partnership to research and promote a series of actionable and substantive policy recommendations that, if enacted, will preserve essential services, lay a foundation for sustainable economic growth and create an environment in which Washingtonians can thrive. Key recommendations: • Establish a public policy foundation for economic vitality. • Reset state spending to a sustainable level.

  38. Priorities for the short-term: 2012

  39. Priorities for the long-term

  40. Questions? www.waroundtable.com @waroundtable on twitter www.facebook.com/washingtonbenchmarks

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